Wednesday, 31 August 2011

THE GREAT BRITISH BAKE OFF - WEEK THREE

It was bread this week and we were all very nervous about what Paul would have to say about our efforts. I do like to make bread, of all the things to bake it gives me the most sense of achievement when I produce something nice - For me, It's easy to get wrong and hard to get right.

In the past I have shied away from loaves and made less temperamental breads like stromboli and fougasse. Bread does scare me a little so I had to really get to grips with my reservations and work hard on coming up with original recipes that I could guarantee would work, have lots of flavour and offer something different.

We started with our signature free form loaf. I have issues with adding ingredients to my bread, I just don't seem to get good results once I add any extras so I new I had to find something that would add lots of flavour but not affect the structure of the dough

Dukkah is a middle eastern spice mix traditionally used as a side dish eaten with olive oil and bread. The name Dukkah is derived from the Arabic for 'to pound' as the mixture of spices and nuts are pounded together after being dry roasted. I also use it on roasted meats , in stews and on pizzas and now in bread.

50g Blanched Almonds or Hazelnuts

50g Sesame Seeds

25g Coriander Seeds

5g Cumin Seeds

1/2tsp Salt Flakes

1/4tsp Freshly Ground Black Pepper

1 tsp Dried Thyme

Put the corriander seeds, cumin seeds, hazelnuts and sesame seeds in a pan and dry roast them till they start to brown and pop. The aroma is fantastic. Remove them from the pan immediately as they will continue to toast and they may burn. Add the remaining ingredients and either use a pestle and mortar to grind them together or whizz them in a mini chopper. I like it a little chunky and to have texture but you can make it as fine as you like.

Dough

500g Strong White Bread Flour

15g Yeast

10g Salt

40g Butter

300g Water

50g Dukkah

A little Olive Oil

Rub the butter into the flour, add the yeast, salt and dukkah and combine. Add the water and mix till it all comes together, I find it easier to use a knife for this. You want to start with quite a wet dough. Put a little olive oil on the surface, this will help it to not stick when kneading. Knead for 10 minutes - if you can manage it, till smooth. If it does start to stick, add a little more oil to the surface or dust yout hands lightly with flour. Try not to add too much flour to your dough though as it will become tough and you will achieve hard bread.

Form the dough into a ball, return it to the bowl and cover with a tea towel. Rest for 1 hour to double in size.

Remove the dough from the bowl and 'knock it back' to it's original size. Now shape it into a ball and rest for a further hour on a baking stone covered with a tea towel. After the hour the dough will have doubled again, cut marks into the loaf and bake at 200C for 40 minutes.

PESTO BREAD

Because I'd used a normal bread dough for the signature loaf I wanted something different for the first of my two rolls. This pesto bread is made with an olive oil dough but rather than use just olive oil, I have used the oil to make the pesto and added that.

Olive oil dough has a lovely soft stretchy texture, I actually prefer to use it for most of my bread, it's good for pizza bases too.

Pesto

50g Basil 30g Pinenuts

30g Pecorino 1 clove Garlic

85ml Olive Oil Salt & Pepper to Season

Whizz all the ingredients together in a mini chopper or processor till you have a lovely sloppy green paste.

Dough

500g Strong White Bread Flour

15g Yeast

10g Salt

320g Water

3 Tblsp Pesto

Mix the flour, yeast and salt. Combine the water with the pesto and mix into the flour with a knife to form a dough. Knead it on a lightly oiled surface for 10 minutes till smooth. Now return the dough to the bowl and cover with a tea towel. Rest for 1 hour till doubled in size.

Remove the dough from the bowl and 'knock back' to original size. Divide it into 12 pieces, they should weigh about 80g each. Roll each one into a sausage then tie them into knots. Rest them on the baking sheet or stone and cover with a tea towel. Rest for a further hour to double again.

Bake for 20-25 minutes at 200C

SWEET COCONUT ROLLS

So, I've used a regular dough and an olive oil dough, now for a sweet dough. This was the bread that made Mary like coconut. It reminds me of my mum's chelsea buns, she replaced the usual sultanas with a mixture of toasted coconut, butter and sugar, every time I taste it I'm transported back to my childhood.

You can eat this bread as it is, still warm from the oven is best but it also goes great with a really hot curry, the sweetness helps combat the heat from the chilli, a bit like peshwari naan.

Coconut Filling

100g Dessicated Coconut

50g Demerara Sugar

50g Butter

500g Strong White Bread Flour

15g Yeast

60g Butter

40g Sugar

10g Salt

2 Eggs

200g Milk

25g Dessicated Coconut

1 tsp Icing Sugar

Make the coconut filling. Toast all the coconut in a dry pan till it browns. Remove it from the pan as it will continue to toast and burn. Remove 25g and set aside for the dough. Now put the butter and sugar in the pan and heat till the butter has melted. Once they have both melted add the remaining coconut and stir to combine.

Now make the dough. Stir the icing sugar into the 25g of coconut and set aside. Warm the milk slightly in a pan. Rub the butter into the flour. Add the yeast, sugar, salt and coconut with icing sugar and stir to combine. Mix in the eggs and milk with a knife and knead for 10 minutes on a slightly oiled surface till smooth. Return the dough to the bowl and cover. Leave to prove for an hour till doubled in size.

The Faffy Bit

Remove from bowl and 'knock back' to original size. Divide the dough into 12 neat balls, they should weigh about 80g each. This is where it gets tricky but only slightly, To form each one, roll each into a disc about 5mm thick and cover with a spoon of coconut filling. Cut from the centre to the edge of the disc then roll it up from the cut edge to form a cone shape. Tuck the dough at the larger end in on itself to make a base, sit the base in the surface and use your thumb to push the point of the cone into the centre and form a dimple. Rest for a further hour on a baking sheet lined with parchment. Cover with a tea towel.

Because it is a sweet dough it can burn if the temperature is too high so bake it at 160C for 20-30 minutes.

BREAD BASKET

If that wasn't enough we had to make a display basket for our rolls. 15 years in child care teaches you something about play dough along with cutting and sticking so that's just what I did!

My friend Ann always buys the most perfect presents and she gave me these fantastic leaf cutters. The whole thing was simple and effective but it was the cutters that made it - with a little help from me!

Salt Dough

2 Cups Plain Flour and Extra for Rolling

1 Cup Salt

1 Cup Warm Water

1 tsp Oil

1 Egg White to glaze and stick extra leaves on

I baked mine for 30 minutes at 140C on the outside then removed the bowl and did it for a further 30 minutes.

Once it's baked glaze the whole thing with egg white and glue on the extra baked leaves also with egg white. Bake for a further 10 minutes.

You definitely deserved Star Baker. Your coconut rolls are so very pretty. And the basket was obviously a huge success.When I saw the trail for GBBO with you saying to Paul Hollywood, "this is something I have over you" I just couldn't wait to see what you were going to say - brave lady! :-D

Hi Jason, I'm so glad everyone it liking my recipes and giving them a go but who is this Sonia? I know I live near Liverpool but that doesn't make me the flame haired songstress Lol x I'm still making your Garlic Fantans btw x

These all look amazing - I was wanting to make the pesto rolls, and I'm guessing the step of adding oil to the dough has been left out by accident? Just wanted to check as I'm no connoiseur of olive oil dough and they look so gorgeous that I don't want to manage to mess them up...

I just got the Great British Bake Off cook book and saw these coconut rolls in the bread section! I'm going to make them tomorrow in my food technology class tomorrow. Thank you so much- they look delicious :)

Hi Yasmin! Saw the GBBO season 3 again recently and made your dukkah loaf yesterday. It was great! and today I made the pesto rolls (still in the oven). I'm wondering whether your recipes are for fan-forced or convection because my baking times seem to be rather longer than yours - the dukkah loaf needed another 15-20 mins and the rolls seem to be needing longer too. If you're using a fan-forced oven, I'll just increase my temps by about 20 degrees, I guess?